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1,868 results for "Alexander the Great" — page 35 of 94
A_4_08 — Bhagavata Purana — Naga and Avatar Sections
The Bhagavata Purana (also called Srimad Bhagavatam) is one of the eighteen Mahapuranas ("Great Ancient Histories") of Hindu literature, composed in Sanskrit between approximately the 6th and 10th centuries CE. Its twelv
A_4_36 — Hopi Prophecy Tablets & Oral Traditions
The Hopi (Hopituh Shi-nu-mu — "The Peaceful People") of northeastern Arizona possess one of the most elaborately structured prophetic cosmological systems among indigenous North American cultures — a system that encompas
A_4_29 — Mongolian & Turkic Epic Traditions
The Mongolian and Turkic epic traditions constitute one of the world's great oral literary heritages, spanning from the Altai Mountains to Anatolia across more than two millennia. Central texts include the Secret History
A_3_08 — Celtic Mythology and Druidic Tradition
Celtic mythology encompasses the religious narratives, cosmological concepts, and heroic legends of the Celtic-speaking peoples who dominated much of western and central Europe from the Hallstatt period (c. 800 BCE) thro
U_1_19 — Neuroscience of Music
The neuroscience of music investigates how the human brain perceives, processes, produces, and responds emotionally to music — revealing that music engages a remarkably distributed network of brain regions spanning audit
U_1_07 — Music and Social Movements
Music and social movements have been inseparable throughout history — music serves as a vehicle for collective identity, emotional mobilization, coded communication, and cultural memory in struggles for justice, labor ri
U_1_15 — Jazz: Improvisation, African Roots, and Cultural Revolution
Jazz — America's most original and influential art form — emerged in the early 20th century from the convergence of African rhythmic and improvisational traditions, African American blues and work songs, European harmony
U_1_03 — Music, Acoustics, and Consciousness in Ancient Traditions
The relationship between music, sound, and altered states of consciousness has been recognized in virtually every known culture — from Paleolithic bone flutes (~40,000 BCE, Hohle Fels, Germany) to Pythagorean harmonic th
U_1_11 — Opera: Musical Theatre, Spectacle, and National Identity
Opera — dramatic works in which the text is entirely or mostly sung to orchestral accompaniment — is one of Western civilization's most ambitious and complex art forms, integrating music, poetry, drama, visual spectacle,
U_3_08 — Glassmaking and Stained Glass
Glass — an amorphous solid formed by rapidly cooling molten silica (SiO₂) with fluxes (soda/potash to lower melting temperature) and stabilizers (lime to prevent water solubility) — has been manufactured for ~5,000 years
U_3_19 — Ancient Tattooing Traditions
Tattooing is one of the oldest and most universal forms of human body modification, with archaeological evidence spanning at least 5,300 years and ethnographic documentation across every populated continent. The oldest k
U_3_04 — Fermentation, Brewing & Sacred Beverages
Fermentation — the biochemical conversion of sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide by yeast and bacteria — is among humanity's oldest biotechnologies, with evidence of intentional fermented beverages dating to the Jiahu r
U_3_14 — Vernacular Architecture: Indigenous, Anti-Colonial, and Resistance Design
Vernacular architecture — buildings designed and constructed by their inhabitants or local builders using traditional techniques, local materials, and accumulated environmental knowledge, without the intervention of prof
U_5_10 — Architecture as Cultural Expression: Sacred and Civic Space
Architecture — the design and construction of buildings and spatial environments — is simultaneously a practical art (shelter, function, structure) and a profound form of cultural expression, embodying a society's cosmol
U_5_01 — Myth in Modern Media: Star Wars, Tolkien & Marvel
Ancient mythological structures persist as the deep architecture of modern popular culture, demonstrating either the psychological universality of certain narrative patterns or the conscious adoption of mythological temp
U_5_13 — Documentary Film and Photography: Witness, Evidence, and Ethics
Documentary film and photography — creative works purporting to represent reality directly, serving as witness, evidence, and social commentary — occupy a uniquely charged position between art and journalism, truth and c
U_5_28 — Hierophany: Sacred Manifestation in Architecture, Landscape, and Ritual
Hierophany — a term coined by Mircea Eliade in The Sacred and the Profane (1957) — denotes any manifestation of the sacred in ordinary reality: a stone, a tree, a building, a moment of light. Unlike theophany (appearance
U_5_23 — Music: Origins, Neuroscience, and Cross-Cultural Universals
Music is a universal human behavior — no known culture lacks it — yet its evolutionary origins, neurological basis, and cross-cultural structures remain among the most debated topics in cognitive science, anthropology, a
U_5_02 — Propaganda Art & Political Visual Culture
Art has served as an instrument of political power throughout history, but the 20th century witnessed the industrialization of propaganda aesthetics on an unprecedented scale.
U_5_19 — Iconoclasm History
Iconoclasm — from Greek eikon (image) and klasma (that which is broken) — is the deliberate destruction of images, statues, monuments, or other visual representations, typically motivated by religious, political, or ideo
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